Scalable parallel regridding algorithms for block‐structured adaptive mesh refinement
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2011 papers
Abstract
Abstract Block‐structured adaptive mesh refinement (BSAMR) is widely used within simulation software because it improves the utilization of computing resources by refining the mesh only where necessary. For BSAMR to scale onto existing petascale and eventually exascale computers all portions of the simulation need to weak scale ideally. Any portions of the simulation that do not will become a bottleneck at larger numbers of cores. The challenge is to design algorithms that will make it possible to avoid these bottlenecks on exascale computers. One step of existing BSAMR algorithms involves determining where to create new patches of refinement. The Berger–Rigoutsos algorithm is commonly used to perform this task. This paper provides a detailed analysis of the performance of two existing parallel implementations of the Berger–Rigoutsos algorithm and develops a new parallel implementation of the Berger–Rigoutsos algorithm and a tiled algorithm that exhibits ideal scalability. The analysis and computational results up to 98 304 cores are used to design performance models which are then used to predict how these algorithms will perform on 100 M cores. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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